Arab Times

Egypt’s three and nine-month T-bill yields fall

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CAIRO, July 15, (RTRS): Yields on Egypt’s three and nine-month treasury bills fell at an auction on Sunday, bucking a trend of rising rates in recent weeks fuelled by what bankers have described as an exit of foreign investors from Egypt’s debt market.

Egypt’s short and long-term debt yields have been climbing since April, hitting their highest rates this month in roughly a year.

Bankers and economists have attributed the rising yields to lower participat­ion among foreign buyers.

They estimate that up to $5 billion in foreign portfolio investment has left Egypt since May amid a broader global selloff in emerging markets, though the government has yet to release data for this period.

The average coverage ratio for treasuries, a measure of participat­ion in debt auctions, dropped to its second lowest level in June since Egypt’s pound currency was floated in late 2016, a research report from Cairo-based investment bank Pharos Holding said on Sunday.

Yields at Sunday’s auction neverthele­ss fell for the first time in about a month for their respective tenors, according to central bank data.

The 91-day bill rates declined to 19.364 percent from 19.69 percent at the last similar auction on July 8, while the 266-day yields decreased to 19.422 percent from 19.68 percent.

The auction saw higher participat­ion than in recent weeks but there was no breakdown available between local and foreign buyers.

Egypt last year became one of the world’s hottest destinatio­ns for portfolio investors after its yields soared to about 22 percent, the result of aggressive central bank rate hikes aimed at curbing inflation.

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